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Samuel Barrington

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Died
  
1800 (1801)

Name
  
Samuel Barrington

Service/branch
  
Royal Navy

Height
  
1.85 m


Years of service
  
1740–90

Weight
  
107 kg

Rank
  
Rear admiral

Date joined
  
2013


Born
  
1729 (
1729
)

Allegiance
  
Kingdom of Great Britain

Relations
  
John Shute Barrington, 1st Viscount Barrington (father)

Role
  
American football linebacker

College
  
South Florida Bulls football

Current team
  
Green Bay Packers (#58 / Linebacker)

Similar People
  
Morgan Burnett, David Bakhtiari, Sam Shields, Mason Crosby, Julius Peppers

Profiles

Admiral Samuel Barrington (1729 – 16 August 1800) was a British admiral.

Samuel was the fourth son of John Shute Barrington, 1st Viscount Barrington of Beckett Hall at Shrivenham in Berkshire (now Oxfordshire). He entered the Royal Navy at the age of 11, and by 1747 had been promoted to post captain.

Seven Years War

He was in continuous service during the peace of 1748–56, and on the outbreak of the Seven Years' War served with Admiral Edward Hawke in the Basque Roads in command of HMS Achilles.

In 1759 Achilles captured a powerful French privateer, after two hours’ fighting. In the Havre-de-Grace expedition of the same year Barrington's ship carried the flag of Rear-Admiral George Brydges Rodney, and in 1760 sailed with John Byron to destroy the Louisbourg fortifications. At the peace in 1763 Barrington had been almost continuously afloat for twenty-two years.

He was next appointed in 1768 to the frigate HMS Venus as governor to the Duke of Cumberland, who remained with him in all ranks from midshipman to rear admiral.

Between 1772 and 1775 He accompanied Captain John Jervis to Russia where they spent time in St. Petersburg and inspected the arsenal and dockyards at Kronstadt and took a tour of the yacht designed by Sir Charles Knowles for Catherine the Great. The pair continued on to Sweden, Denmark and northern Germany. All the while Jervis and Barrington made notes on defences, harbour charts and safe anchorages. They came home via the Netherlands, the two once again making extensive studies of the area and took copious notes describing any useful information. In 1778 Barrington became commander-in-chief of the Leeward Islands Station.

Barrington and Jervis then took a private cruise along the Channel coast calling at various harbours including Brest and making and improving their charts as they went. Barrington and Jervis, later Earl St. Vincent remained firm friends throughout their lives. On his return home, Barrington was offered, but declined, the command of the Channel fleet.

Barrington's last active service was the relief of Gibraltar in October 1782. As admiral he flew his flag for a short time in 1790, but did not serve in the French Revolutionary Wars. He died in August 1800.

Santa Fe Island, also called Barrington Island, in the Galapagos was named after him.

References

Samuel Barrington Wikipedia